Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is that particular Days Inn a homeless shelter as reported in the DC Metro forum or is it a hotel again?
Both is my impression although there won't be hotel guests much longer. Van Ness Main Street reported it is for sale. Maybe the city will put some kind of housing there?
Who the city was housing there came up at a meeting Mary Cheh hosted. Once city bureaucrat said his agency did not have people there currently, Cheh did not respond.
The police have received complaints re: drugs and sex trade re: the hotel in the past.
Hope the victims will recover. It is my understanding that one woman was found dead and was revived at the scene.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jesus this is in Van Ness? I left dc 10 years ago but isn’t that a quiet area with expensive homes?
Yes. I lived there for years. Those two buildings mentioned - Chesapeake and Saratoga - were quiet and unremarkable and right down the street were million+ homes and condos that were going for large $$’s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No social worker, down on their luck pro bono lawyer filing frivolous lawsuits, shelter, or affordable housing in any neighborhood will solve these peoples numerous problems rendering them incapable of functioning at the most basic levels.
Until you realize more mental hospitals and prisons are needed, the consequences will increase exponentially. Not everyone can be rehabilitated. There's no cure for mental illness. In most cases, these people need to remain in prison and mental hospitals for life. It isn't inhumane if they belong in these institutions and can’t be cured. It's inhumane and negligent to have them running loose on the streets harming themselves and others. It's likely none of these people could tell the difference between a shelter or street versuses prison or mental hospital. They might for the first time in their life experience contentment and happiness in the institutions.
Like the mentally ill homeless person drawing swastikas on columns in Union Station? Housing first won't cure him?
Anonymous wrote:No social worker, down on their luck pro bono lawyer filing frivolous lawsuits, shelter, or affordable housing in any neighborhood will solve these peoples numerous problems rendering them incapable of functioning at the most basic levels.
Until you realize more mental hospitals and prisons are needed, the consequences will increase exponentially. Not everyone can be rehabilitated. There's no cure for mental illness. In most cases, these people need to remain in prison and mental hospitals for life. It isn't inhumane if they belong in these institutions and can’t be cured. It's inhumane and negligent to have them running loose on the streets harming themselves and others. It's likely none of these people could tell the difference between a shelter or street versuses prison or mental hospital. They might for the first time in their life experience contentment and happiness in the institutions.
Anonymous wrote:OP and I just remembered that Mary Cheh’s car was stolen in broad daylight in front of Bread Furst in like December of 2020? Or maybe early 21? That’s on the same block. Did she mention that at the press conference? Beyond ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:So is the goal of moving the unhoused and indigent into Forest Hills to bring Forest Hills down or to bring the unhoused up? This could be a tremendous opportunity for these people, but I don’t see them taking advantage of it and I really only hear eye rolling PP celebrating that her faction has succeeded in spreading blight. So let's reconsider if there really is any point to the project before "equity" drags everyone down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if this is still true, but that Days Inn has often housed tourists who come to DC for protests and such, and I was, startlingly, told to avoid the area the week of the January 6th insurrection.
If, as it has been reported, the violence happened inside the hotel, perhaps the issue is complicated by the need to both protect free speech and other Constitutional rights, while also protecting the rights of those of us who live and work here.
Omg you are ridiculous
DC people — you are getting the crime you voted for
+1 you deserve all of this. If you care then vote differently.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if this is still true, but that Days Inn has often housed tourists who come to DC for protests and such, and I was, startlingly, told to avoid the area the week of the January 6th insurrection.
If, as it has been reported, the violence happened inside the hotel, perhaps the issue is complicated by the need to both protect free speech and other Constitutional rights, while also protecting the rights of those of us who live and work here.
Anonymous wrote:The woman who died was young, I believe 20 years old and from Waldorf. I heard part of a statement from her family hinting that the last two years had been a struggle. I wish we had more details.
Such an eye-opener to learn more about a nice neighborhood, where I used to live.